Pacific Lingcod, an Omnivorous Fish, Gains and Loses 20 Teeth Each Day 16
The Pacific lingcod is an ill-tempered, omnivorous fish with a mouth like a messy silverware drawer, its 500-plus teeth arranged haphazardly on two sets of highly mobile jaws. New research, published this month in the scientific journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, reveals that the Pacific lingcod gains and loses an average of 20 teeth every day. From a report: If humans had the same dental scheme, we'd replace a tooth daily. "Kind of makes braces useless," says Adam Summers, professor of biology at the University of Washington and co-author of the study. "And brushing." The Pacific lingcod's rate of tooth replacement came as a surprise to researchers, says study co-author Karly Cohen, a PhD student at the University of Washington studying the biomechanics of feeding.
"The existing research we have on tooth replacement comes from oddballs," Cohen says, such as anglerfish that grow teeth on their foreheads, or the piranha, which can lose a quarter of its teeth at a time. "But most fish have teeth like lingcod. And so it could very well be that most fishes are losing mass amounts of their teeth daily" and replacing them quickly, like this species, she adds. The Pacific lingcod is an ornery sportfish about four feet long at adulthood, an ambush predator that frequently indulges in cannibalism. It's found on the North American west coast, from Alaska to Baja California, Mexico, and it's economically important to fishers in part because it's "great in a taco," Cohen says.
"The existing research we have on tooth replacement comes from oddballs," Cohen says, such as anglerfish that grow teeth on their foreheads, or the piranha, which can lose a quarter of its teeth at a time. "But most fish have teeth like lingcod. And so it could very well be that most fishes are losing mass amounts of their teeth daily" and replacing them quickly, like this species, she adds. The Pacific lingcod is an ornery sportfish about four feet long at adulthood, an ambush predator that frequently indulges in cannibalism. It's found on the North American west coast, from Alaska to Baja California, Mexico, and it's economically important to fishers in part because it's "great in a taco," Cohen says.
Re:Eh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Some nerds like nature and biology, not computers. It's all science.
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Don't go in the water (Score:2)
Why do you hate Floridians? (Score:1)
From your linked article:
"And the bottom line is that this summer in Florida, people did not do as well as they should have. Why? Because far too many of them died. The raw numbers alone are staggering. In all of 2020 — before vaccines essentially eliminated the risk of death for most recipients — 23,384 Floridians died of COVID-19. Now nearly as many — 21,000 and counting — have died in the past four months alone. And another 135 Floridians are still dying, on average, every single
Ill-tempered (Score:2)
But are they more ill-tempered than mutant sea bass?
Re: (Score:2)
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Same. They are clearly not afraid of anything and at least think they have huge razor sharp teeth although they seem to do minimal damage compared to a barracuda or shark.
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Given my dental history (Score:2)
I can definitely see some advantages to this approach.
Er? (Score:2)
"But most fish have teeth like lingcod. And so it could very well be that most fishes are losing mass amounts of their teeth daily" and replacing them quickly, like this species, she adds.
Wouldn't someone have, you know, noticed that by now? Like those in captivity, those being studied, etc.? Just wondering.
Be honest (Score:2)
Who's gonna try to give Gus at the Stardrop Saloon a Fish Taco made with Lingcod next time they fire up Stardew Valley?
Paywall (Score:1)
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